6.13.2026

Canzoni Italiane: A short listening companion through your Italian playlist

Each link is a YouTube search pre-filtered for the official video, so the top result is almost always the artist's official channel or label upload.

Anna Oxa

Born in Bari to an Albanian father and Italian mother, Anna Oxa burst onto the scene at age 16 at the 1978 Sanremo Festival with the punk-tinged Un'emozione da poco. Over four decades she has reinvented herself constantly — new wave, pop, soul — winning Sanremo twice and becoming one of the most recognizable voices of Italian pop.


Annalisa Minetti

A singer and Paralympic athlete, Annalisa Minetti won Sanremo in 1998 with Senza te o con te in the Newcomers section. Blind since her twenties due to a degenerative condition, she has built parallel careers as a vocalist and as a world-record-holding runner.



Arisa

Born Rosalba Pippa in Genoa, Arisa won Sanremo Newcomers in 2009 with the quirky Sincerità and the main competition in 2014 with Controvento. She is known for a clear, expressive voice and a willingness to take stylistic risks — from jazz standards to pure pop.


Chiara Civello

A Roman jazz-pop singer-songwriter who studied at Berklee and has collaborated with Burt Bacharach, Esperanza Spalding, and Ana Carolina. Her music sits at the crossroads of bossa nova, jazz, and Italian melody.



Domenico Modugno

The father of modern Italian pop. His 1958 Nel blu dipinto di blu — better known abroad as Volare — won the first two Grammy Awards ever given and became one of the best-selling singles in history. Dio Come Ti Amo! won Sanremo in 1966 with Gigliola Cinquetti.


Espresso Milano

A contemporary lounge / easy-listening project that reinterprets Italian classics in a chilled, café-jazz style. Perfect background music for anyone learning the songbook of Italian pop.

Raffaella Carrà - A far l'amore comincia tu (Libelei) (1977) • TopPop

Italian singer Raffaella Carrà has died July 5, 2021 at the age of 78. Carrà became known, especially in the Netherlands, for her song 'A Far L'amore Comincia Tu'. This song was a big hit in Holland, especially because of her performance in TopPop!

Nobody in the Netherlandse understood what the song was about because nobody speaks Italian. Perhaps that's why the enigmatic chorus stuck, and Raffaella Carrà's 'A far l'amore comincia tu' became a huge hit. When the Italian singer performed in the studio of Avro's Toppop, the whole country sang along: 'Scoppia scoppia mi sco...', and then that double explosion of the bass drum. And although Carrà would turn out to be a one-hit wonder in the Netherlands with her song, the song became a cult hit here too, which would continue to pop up everywhere, from carnival to hipster parties.

Carrà ((1943-20210, who passed away on Monday July 5, 2021, sang about love in her 1976 hit, and especially about the physical pleasures that come with it. And Carrà certainly didn't speak in secret. "When you start making love to me, my heart explodes, explodes, explodes," she sang. And in the unforgettable choreography accompanying the song, she swung her head perilously from front to back, dressed in a glittery dress with a historically low cleavage. When Carrà appeared on television, something happened!

The song became a massive hit in many countries selling more than 20 million copies. In the Netherlands it reached #3 in the Top 40 and in Belgium #1 in the BRT Top 30. In The UK it became a hit much later. In april 1978 it charted in the UK Singles Chart with a peak position of 9 and under the title: 'Do it do it again.' This is the chroma-key version. Also check out the original version on the TopPop channel!

Source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YnBs1MuGSAA


Fiorella Mannoia

One of Italy's great female interpreters — not a writer of her own songs in the early years, but a singer whose smoky, lived-in voice transforms whatever she touches. Quello Che Le Donne Non Dicono, written for her by Enrico Ruggeri, is a quiet feminist anthem.


Francesca Alotta

Sicilian singer who shot to fame at Sanremo 1992 winning the Newcomers section in duet with Aleandro Baldi (Non amarmi). Her version of the Neapolitan classic 'O surdato 'nnammurato shows the depth of her vocal tradition.


Gianni Morandi

A national treasure. Morandi has been recording since 1962, weathering trend after trend with a sunny voice and an even sunnier public persona. Canzoni stonate, written by Lucio Dalla, is a wistful late-career gem about songs that "miss the note" yet still touch the heart.


Mara Sattei

Roman singer-songwriter (real name Sara Mattei) who emerged from the thaSup / 333 Mob crew alongside her brother, producer tha Supreme. Her style blends moody R&B with vulnerable Italian pop.


Maria Antonietta & Colombre

Maria Antonietta (Letizia Cesarini) and Colombre (Giovanni Imparato) are two indie singer-songwriters from Italy's Marche region who occasionally collaborate. La felicità e basta is a gentle indie-folk duet.




Mina

Mina Mazzini, the Tigress of Cremona, is widely considered the greatest Italian female singer of all time — three-and-a-half octave range, fearless phrasing, and a career that defied every rule of show business (she retired from live performance in 1978 and has never looked back, yet still releases hit albums from Switzerland).


Ornella Vanoni, Elodie & Ditonellapiaga

A three-generation collaboration: Ornella Vanoni, the elegant grande dame of Italian song (born 1934, still releasing music); Elodie, contemporary pop superstar; and Ditonellapiaga, indie-pop newcomer. Ti voglio bridges their eras beautifully.


Peppino di Capri

The pianist-singer from the island of Capri who brought rock 'n' roll and bossa nova flavors to Italian music in the 1960s. Two-time Sanremo winner, beloved for his cool, sun-drenched melodies.


Piji & Simona Molinari

Piji (Pierluigi Siciliani) is a Roman swing/jazz singer and songwriter who often collaborates with the silky-voiced Simona Molinari. Their Swing politik is a witty, big-band-flavored duet.



Sergio Endrigo

A poet of Italian song. Born in Pula (then Italy, now Croatia), Endrigo won Sanremo in 1968 with Canzone per te. His melodies are deceptively simple, his lyrics quietly devastating; Io che amo solo te has been covered by everyone from Mina to Ornella Vanoni.


Buon ascolto! 🎶